ZZ Friday, June 29, 1979 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Israel Rejects EEC Settlement Statement ALUMINUM SWING 5454110 Lowest Prices in lown EVERGREEN SL Dr , CO JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israel has "totally rejected" last week's Mideast state- ment by the nine European Economic Community SMALL BEQUESTS BUILD A STRONG ISRAEL If the tradition of including the Jewish National Fund in, the Will of every Jew were in wed, sufficient - resources would be accumulated to ensure the future of the • young Je wish State on a sound basis of land development., social welfare, and justice. - A bequest to the Jewish National Fund - should be as traditional as having a Blue Box in one's home. You may want your bequest to be dedicated to afforestation, to a village, a Nachla,h, tG--a children's play area, to perpetual yahrzeit or kaddish, or to some form of permanent tribute in the names of persons dear to you, Consult the Foundation for Jewish National Fund, 27308 Southfield Rd., - 557-6644 They will gladly co-operate with you in working plans to meet your special requirements, in-strict privacy. (EEC) foreign ministers. A letter sent by Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan to his European colleagues, which Dayan read out from the Knesset podium, termed the EEC statement "injuri- ous to the entire process of negotiations." The EEC ministers, in their statement, criticized "certain positions and ac- tions" of the Israeli gov- ernment as detrimental to the peace process and speci- fically criticized Israeli set- tlements in the adminis- tered areas as illegal. Dayan's reply said, "The position taken by the EEC can only discourage the negotiations between the parties on all the various is- sues involved in autonomy and the future of Judaea, Samaria and the Gaza dis- trict. It had been our expec- tation that the EEC would give its full support to the historic achievement of the Israel-Egypt peace treaty "I can only ask you to weigh most carefully the grave responsibility and consequences of attempts to prejudice and dictate from without the course of negotiations, strengthening the forces committed to their failure," Dayan's let- ter said. He claimed that, "The Israeli settlements are in our opinion strictly in ac- cord with international NOW ENTERING OUR FINAL RENTAL PHASE Seniors, Are You Living Alone and NOT Liking It? O!, Living With Your Children and Feel Like You're In The Way? Perhaps You Should Consider.. . 6 5 61Ala V0 CWB • An Adult Community Located at 28301 Franklin Road, Southfield, Michigan Among the Many Services We Offer... • Breakfast and Dinner • Apartment Cleaning • Linen Service law and we know of no rule of law which could feasibly ban Jews from living in Judaea, Samaria and Gaza. Not a single Arab has been displaced by these settlements. On the contrary, the estab- lishment of the Jewish settlements in these areas has brought with it eco- nomic development and additional sources of employment to the Arab inhabitants of these areas." Israeli officials say they are especially upset and dis- turbed by the West German role in the evolution of the EEC statement. From a position of supporting the Camp David accords and the ensuing peace treaty, Germany has steadily vee- red towards aligning itself behind French opposition to the U.S.-orchestrated Release of Ida Nudel Sought on Anniversary of Her Exile NEW YORK (JTA) — The outgoing chairman and chairman-elect of the Na- tional Conference on Soviet Jewry (NCSJ) urged Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev to release Ida Nudel from exile and allow her to emi- grate to Israel. Eugene Gold, who will end his- three-year chair- manship on Aug. 15, and Los Angeles attorney Bur- ton Levinson, declared "In the spirit of good will and cooperation of the SALT II accords, we urge the Soviet Union to release Ida Nudel and allow her to join her sis- ter in Israel." June 21 was the first an- niversary of Nudel's exile to a small colony a few kilometers from the tiny Siberian village of Krivosheyno. Known as the "Guardian Angel" of other Jewish prisoners of con- science in the Soviet Union, Nudel first applied to emi- grate to Israel in 1971. Repeatedly detained and interrogated by the secret police, she placed on her apartment balcony a sign that read, "KGB, give me my visa." That defiant act precipitated her four-year exile for "malicious hooliganism." Meanwhile, the Long Is- land Committee for Soviet Jewry commemorated the first anniversary of Nuclei's exile by dedicating two benches on the grounds of the Nassau County Sup- reme Court building in Mineola in her name. In a related event, a spe- cial vigil was held outside the Soviet Consulate in San Francisco. The Bay Areas Council on Soviet Jewry, which sponsored the event, declared the week of June 14-21 as Ida Nudel Week, as part of the international campaign to gain her re- lease. In Israel, a group of women demonstrated in front of the Finnish Em- bassy, which handles Soviet affairs, urging Nudel's re- lease. In a related development, officials in Washington speculate that the Russians will release JeWish dissi- dent Anatoly Shcharansky within a few months. A 31-year-old computer 'technician, Shcharansky is serving a 13-year term fol- lowing his conviction last summer on what Western observers regard as trumped-up charges of treason and espionage. * * * Freedom Asked for Wallenberg VIENNA (JTA) — The United States has asked the Soviet -Union to free Raoul Wallenberg, the Swedish diplomat missing since 1945 who is credited with saving 25,000 Hungarian Jews from deportation to the Auschwitz death camp. According to Simon Wie- senthal, head of the Nazi War Crimes Documenta- tion Center in Vienna, Wal- lenberg's name was on a list of Soviet dissidents which U.S. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance handed to the Soviet delegation at the Salt II summit talks in Vienna last week. * * * Detroiter Recalls Visits in Russia With Refusniks Detroiter Sharon Krevor will discuss her recent visit with Jewish refusniks and dissidents in the Soviet Union on Jewish Commu- nity Highlights, 9:45 a.m. Sunday on Channel 2. • Attendants on Duty 24 hrs. Daily NY Film Maker Cites Problems • All Utilities Earle Shulman, a 25- year-old New York Or- thodox Jew who makes films when he can get finan- cial backing, has expressed the belief that American films generally stereotype Jews and blames Jewish movie-goers to some degree_ for that situation. Shulman, who has a major in mathematics and works at odd jobs between film-making, spelled out his views in an analysis in the December 1978 issue of "Network," the publication • Chauffeur Service.. . • Ongoing Activities and, of course Companionship! ALL APARTMENTS ARE AIR CONDITIONED AND HAVE KITCHENETTES Come to Our OPEN HOUSE EVERY SUNDAY from 1:00 to 4:00 PM. ... And See For Yourself Call 353-2810 for-details By BEN GALLOB (Copyright 1979, JTA, Inc.) of the North American Jewish Students Network. Shulman listed some foreign-made films dealing with the Holocaust involv- ing Jews in support of his goal of putting into perspec- tive "the lack of quality in American Jewish movies." By contrast, he said, in the United States "we did everything in our power" to ignore the Holocaust. He contended that this "is why the rare movie that comes along in America concern- ing the Holocaust is trivial." He cited "Voyage of the Damned" as an example. Israel-Egypt peace process. Immediately after the is- suance of the EEC state- ment, West Germany's Foreign Minister Hans- Dietrich Genscher left for a visit to Libya. In Paris, Alain Poher, president of the French Se- nate said that many Fren- chmen understand Israel's attitude in the autonomy talks. Poher, a friend of Is- rael, did not, however, ex- press support for Israel's policy or its creation of.new settlements in the occupied territories. Poher spoke at a farewell lunch tendered by the Parliamentary Friendship Group with Israel to departing Israeli Ambassador Mordechai Gazit. In spite of the presence at the lunch of Israel's staunchest friends in France, none of the speakers endorsed the current settlement policy. Several members of the French Parliament told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that they "understand but not necessarily approve" the Israeli position. Gazit is due to leave France next month. He will be replaced by Meir Rosenne, legal ad- visor to Israel's Foreign Ministry, who is due to take over his new post in the autumn. Israelis Flee Nicaragua War TEL AVIV (JTA) Tahal, Israel's water re- sources planning company announced that it has pul- led all of its personnel and their families out of Man- agua, - the capital of Nicaragua which is now a battlefield between the Sandinista rebels and the Somoza government. The move means aban- donment of an eight-year ir- rigation and water systems contract granted the Israeli firm by the Somoza regime three years ago. The contract brought Tahal revenue of more than $1.5 million a year and still had five years to go. The company has also abandoned its heavy machinery and other equipment in Nicaragua, but that loss is insured. What it fears most is that the revolt in Nicaragua may spark similar uprisings in other Central and South American countries where Tahal is-working under con- tract. Merkava Rolling JERUSALEM (ZINS) — Israel's armaments indus- try is expected to export $600 million worth of mate- riel in 1980, including the new Merkava tank. The Merkava has 100,000 parts grouped in 131 series. Israel manufactures 98 of the series, imports 16 and produces the rest under cooperative production rights. Some 200 factories are involved in producing the Merkava. 4.